Drigg

Drigg was the point our tour of the northwest became a tour of the
nuclear coast. Right next to the station is the Low-Level Waste
Repository, where mostly harmless nuclear waste is buried. The
station itself is a quiet two-platform affair with its own signalbox,
a station building, and a hotel.

The front of the station building, now occupied by a craft and coffee
shop:

Next to the station building is a small car park, from where we get
this view of the station building with the station itself to the
right:

The entrance from the car park to platform 1:

The entrance takes us onto platform 1:

The rear of the station building, seen from platform 2 opposite:

Looking west along platform 1:

Further along platform 1, looking back east. The station hotel/pub is
on the left, followed by platform 1's shelter. In the background is
the old station building and the level crossing which connects the two
platforms:

Platform 1 is well planted and has this sign embedded in the
shrubbery:

Looking west from the end of platform 1, with the nuclear site visible
behind the fence on the left:

A zoomed look down the line from the west end of platform 1:

Platform 2 has no building but this shelter, on the right here as we
look east:

The western end of platform 2:

These step sit on platform 2:

Platform 2 is planted, and this rockery bears the station's name:

On the other side of the level crossing stands Drigg signalbox:

Looking east along the line from the level crossing, with an old goods
shed on the left: